Deezle the Defiler had felt something, and that something had grown into an itch. He had been left alone on monitor duty, he was always left alone on monitor duty, and so looked at the various scrying mirrors that they had set up. They all looked normal, but one had a crack through it. The mirror had gone black; it wasn't reflecting anything. A moment of reflection and he smiled; that had been the chetan trap.
If the mirror was broken, then its partner at the site itself must have been destroyed.
They had set the trap up to bind the servants of nature so that they could be used to attack local towns, something that the birds would never do. Chetans were guardians of nature; as long as people didn't do anything too destructive they could care less what the apes did. But, with the proper binding spell, oh, the havoc they could wreak. He smiled at the villages and towns that they had used the birds to destroy, especially as the binding spell partially transmogrified them, removing their wings and replacing them with strong, feathered arms.
Watching the birds betray their more intrinsic nature had been especially gratifying to watch.
But now the mirror had been destroyed. That could only mean that not only had someone happened upon the site and released the birds, but had also triggered the aggressively exothermic fire blast trap, and several of the chetans' would-be liberators were dead. While he was somewhat saddened that there would be no cooked bodies waiting for him, he smiled: They had at least done the survivors the favor of utterly cremating the bodies.
Lellend would be so pleased to find that his trap had worked. A simple trap, one designed to lure would-be heroes looking for a demon to defeat and then literally blowing up in their faces. Hopefully, at least two of the birds had been killed in the attempt; he really hated those birds. However...they did have some roasted turkey in the refrigerator. He moved in that direction, hoping they still had a decent red wine to go along with it. And some potato salad...sure, this plane had some magical issues, but the foods were at least decent. Few planets he had been to had such a variety of foods, and that was even ignoring the people themselves.
Which reminded him: Who were they having at the next barbecue? He needed to send out some invitations. He smirked as he realized that there were fewer people to worry about inviting: Some poor soldiers were one with the wind. He grabbed a rind of brie as he headed back to his seat at the monitoring station. The day could only get better.
* * * * *
Kev was inspecting the new crater. He had seen no bodies, but the charcoal surrounding the crater implied that no one had survived. Lieutenant Sawyer was barely holding it together as she called in the situation. Lieutenant Prowse stood guard, looking for something to show up and be just hostile enough to justify self-defense.
Lieutenant
Sawyer finished her call and walked over to Kev. “Anything to
note?”
Kev motioned for her to follow him to the deepest
part of the crater. “Yes. You should look at this.” He pointed at
a hole leading to a tunnel under them.
"Definitely signs of worked earth.” She looked around through the hole. “There are no stalagmites, and the floor is too smooth.” She took a step back. “Can you widen the hole?”
He reached into the hole and pulled. Two huge chunks flew towards opposite ends of the crater. Lieutenant Sawyer knelt and flashed a light into the darkness. That it was a tunnel and not a natural cave was now obvious; wooden support beams could be seen. Trails had even developed; loose dirt was virtually absent from the center but was instead piled near the walls. It was even easy to see patterns of movement, as two trails had been pressed into the dirt; one for each direction.
She
stood up and took a couple of steps away from the hole. “I hate
coincidences.” She pulled out her tablet and started pulling up
maps, plotting out circles. “Yeah, it appears that this silo's just
off-center of the towns that were hit, but if we had another town
here,” and she added a dot to the map, “then the location of the
silo makes perfect sense. But that places the extra town underneath a
mountain.” She put the tablet back in its holster and looked at
Kev. “Ready to do some spelunking?”
“Certainly. This
could be interesting!”
She
shifted to subvocal. “Bring all of the vehicles to the center of
the crater; we've found something that needs to be explored.”
She
called in to Fort Solace that they had found a tunnel and that they
would be investigating the tunnel before heading in. Over the next
twenty minutes, the three of them managed to bring the flivvers and
the Kronus to the center of the crater, throw camouflage nets over
the flivvers, and then even place some mines around the vehicles.
When they had done that, Lieutenant Prowse entered a password into
the Kronus. “Okay, it's in defensive mode. Ready.”
Lieutenant Sawyer nodded and then turned to Kev. She handed him a flashlight, which he accepted. “You're first if you don't mind.” He nodded and then dropped down the hole; he then assisted the other two down. They were soon a few hundred meters down the tunnel.
* * * * *
A flash of blue and Samuels was throwing up on an otherwise gorgeous ridge. Rodriguez was smirking, even as Walker was slowly rising. Douglas was enjoying the suffering possibly a bit too much. “Normally, I would have warned you, but I figured given the choice between a warning and saving your collective butts, you would prefer me saving your collective butts.”
Rodriguez
saluted him. “Thanks for the save, kid.”
“No problem,
sergeant.”
"So, no glow, kid?”
"Yeah, well, we did teleport just outside the zone: No zone, no mana.”
Walker
wiped away the residue on his mouth. “That could take some getting
used to. I take it's something that you get used to over
time?”
Douglas stopped smiling. “It took me a good dozen
tries before I stopped throwing up. Maybe a few dozen tries after
that before the urge to hurl completely disappeared. Turns out the
trick is just not breathing before you teleport.”
Samuels finally rose. “I'll remember that next time.”
Rodriguez was looking at the sun. “I'm guessing we were 'teleported' about two clicks due east of where we were.”
"And
you would be correct. I had to get us out in a hurry, so I just
grabbed who I could. However, it's a desperation move, so no
finesse.”
Rodriguez
pulled his brim forward. “Well, we've got a good twenty minutes of
walking to get back to the vehicles. You guys ready to go?”
Walker
nodded as did Samuels. Douglas started walking. “Yeah, we may as
well get going.”
"I don't think so.” A teenage girl's voice came from just over the ridge.
Douglas stopped and slumped. “Not now, Priscilla.”
A young woman in denim pants and a silk blouse with long green hair stormed over to Douglas. “It's 'Morgana', and you know it, Douglas!”
He
turned to the rest of the group. “This is the sorceress 'Morgana'.”
He bowed before the young woman. “Or 'Priscilla' to those who have
known her since she was in diapers.” He stood up straight. “What
do you need?”
"You're a hard person to find, bro. It took a while for Exo to figure out where you would be. You've been rather mobile of late.” She slapped her forehead. “Oh, yeah. Forgot something.” Her hand glowed and she tossed the energy straight up, where it blossomed into a neon yellow rose.
Rodriguez's
eyes squinted as he looked at Douglas. “I thought you said people
couldn't do magic outside the zone.”
Douglas tilted his head
a little. “I'm a wizard, she's a sorceress. The rules are
different; basically, I'm more powerful and well-rounded, but she's
not limited to the zones.” He smiled. “And better
looking.”
Morgana glared at Douglas then Rodriguez. “At
least, that's what he tells himself. But yeah; our connection to the
magic is different. It's best to think of it like it's one of my
acquaintances while for him it's his closest ally; we may run
together but she can be fickle, while for him as long he respects her
rules she's at his beck and call.”
He focused on his sister. “So again: What's up?”
She twisted her hair. “I can't just check in on my favorite brother?”
Douglas looked at Rodriguez. “Her only brother she means.” He looked back at her.
She sighed deeply. “Fine. We've been seeing an uptick in storms and portal generation. Exo has been tracking the pattern, and there's been a series of storms being formed in a straight line towards Fort Solace, and each storm is more powerful than the last. Shrike has also noticed that there have been a series of regions transformed, however temporarily, into extra-dimensional landscapes as well as outright portals. This has led to an increase in xenos, both the good kind and the not-so-good kind.”
Douglas' eyes rolled. “Fun. At least Fort Solace is outside the zone. Any ideas as to what may be causing it, or is it something I need to look into?”
She tilted her head. “We were looking for you. What do you think, genius?”
He sighed. “Okay, I'll look into it.”
"Cool.”
A
rumbling could be heard, and soon enough a large ATV popped up. It
came close to the group before stopping. Two teenage males popped
out, a lanky kid in green cloaks and a more athletic redhead in
head-to-toe denim.
Douglas walked over to the guys. “Exo! Shrike!” The two ran over to him, and they all hugged tightly. They had a few moments to catch up until they were joined by Morgana. After a second round of hugs, the other three mounted the ATV and drove off. Douglas walked back to the group, smiling.
Walker looked at Douglas. “Fort Solace is outside the zone. Why would it be targeted?”
Douglas
focused on Rodriguez. “Time to head out?”
Rodriguez glared
at Douglas. “We couldn't get a ride?”
“We weren't going
their way, and they need to track down a couple of other wizards. Big
things are happening, and they need to nip them in the bud.”
"Fine. Let's move out.” Rodriguez started walking and the other three soon joined him.
Douglas walked over to Walker, bringing out his own tablet as he did so. “Wanna see something?”
Walker was unnerved by the request. “Um...sure?” Walker looked down at the tablet; the cracks around the edges and generally dustiness made it one of the oldest tablets he had seen. “Just how old is that thing, anyway?”
Douglas glared at him. He pressed a few buttons, and a map of the area around Fort Solace popped up. “Okay, this is the map you're used to.” A few more buttons were pressed and part of the screen turned blue. “This is the current zone around the base.” By now Rodriguez had sauntered over, easily keeping pace with them. “Now, entering the points Morgana mentioned,” and he pressed a few more buttons leaving behind triangles on the screen, “and you see that they line up just north of the base.”
Walker stopped, then caught up. “There's a skyscraper right there.”
Rodriguez went through the geography in his head. “That would be the Rochester-Fallon building. Scary place.”
Douglas shut down the tablet and put it away. “It may not be a bad idea to figure out why it's such a scary place.”
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